White Tara is a sister of green Tara both have emerged from the lotus that formed due to the compassioned tears of Chenrezig Avalokiteshvara. She is portrayed in white light-like snow-light skin, which signifies her purity, the immaculate truth of Dharma, and perfectly pure wisdom. Goddess White Tara is dressed in delightful silks and jewels. Her legs are crossed in what Buddhist tantra calls the vajra posture, her legs and arms have eyes on them. Her left hand is held in front of her breast in the gesture of bestowing protection holding the stem of a spray of blue flowers. Her right hand rests on her right knee, turned outward to give all beings, she also has eyes on both of her hand palms.
<title>White Tara</title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> White Tara is the goddess who grants the boon of healthy longevity. White Tara is often referred to as the Mother of all the Buddhas. She represents the motherly aspect of compassion. Her white color indicates purity but also indicates that she is Absolute Truth, complete and undifferentiated.
She has seven eyes: the two usual eyes, plus an eye in the centre of her forehead and eyes in each of her hands and feet. These indicate that she sees all suffering and all cries for help in the human world using both ordinary and psychic or extraordinary means of perception. They thus symbolize the vigilance of her compassion.
White Tara has a lovely, young face. With her right hand, she makes the boon-granting gesture and her left hand, holding the stem of a lotus flower between her thumb and fourth finger, makes the gesture which grants protection to her devotees.
The elaborate lotus flower, held in the left hand is called Utpala. It contains three blooms: the first, with seeds, symbolizes the past Buddha Kashyapa; the second in full flower, symbolizes the present Buddha Shakyamuni; and the third, ready to bloom, symbolizes the Future Buddha Maitreya. This signifies that White Tara is the essence of all three Buddhas of the past, the present, and the future. Click Here to View the Thangka Painting along with its Brocade
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